Scott Pruitt had aide do various personal tasks, including hunt for a used Trump hotel mattress

In mid-September, the Environmental Protection Agency chief’s director of scheduling and advance contacted the Trump International Hotel in Washington with an unusual request. Millan Hupp wanted to know how much the hotel would charge EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt for purchasing one of its used mattresses.

Hupp’s search for a discount “Trump Home Luxury Plush Euro Pillow Top” mattress, which she detailed in a recent interview with congressional investigators, was one of several unusual tasks she performed for the administrator. The senior aide also scouted apartments for her boss in some of the District’s hippest neighborhoods and helped arrange his family vacation to California over the New Year’s holiday so that the Pruitts could watch the Oklahoma Sooners play in the Rose Bowl.

Pruitt’s push to enlist a subordinate in his quest for cheap bedding — outlined in a letter Monday from two of the top Democrats on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, Elijah E. Cummings (Md.) and Gerald E. Connolly (Va.), to the panel’s chairman, Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.) — was one of several efforts he has made to minimize his personal expenses since moving to Washington.

The Oversight Committee is conducting a probe of several spending and management decisions Pruitt has made since taking the helm of the EPA. Those include first-class travel taken as a security precaution until earlier this year and an unusual rental arrangement he had with a lobbyist for nearly half of 2017, in which he paid $50 a night to stay at her Capitol Hill condo — but only on the nights he slept there.

Citing the new information that surfaced during Hupp’s interview, Cummings and Connolly asked that the chairman “issue a subpoena to obtain documents that are currently being withheld by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) relating to Administrator Scott Pruitt’s multiple abuses of authority in using agency staff for his own personal purposes.”

“If Ms. Hupp’s statements to the Committee are accurate, Administrator Pruitt crossed a very clear line and must be held accountable,” they added.

Asked about the matter Monday, EPA spokesman Jahan Wilcox said in an email, “We are working diligently with Chairman Gowdy and are in full cooperation in providing the Committee with the necessary documents, travel vouchers, receipts and witnesses to his inquiries.”

Hupp described her work for Pruitt on an array of personal tasks, including booking nonwork flights with his personal credit card, during a closed-door interview with Republican and Democratic aides from the House panel on May 18. Hupp said she recalled that Pruitt “has spoken with someone at the Trump hotel who had indicated there could be a mattress he could purchase, an old mattress he could purchase,” and that the administrator “had expressed interest in securing a mattress” to her.

Hupp said that she did not recall what resulted from the inquiry but, asked to confirm that “it was not for use at EPA,” she replied, “Not to my knowledge.”

Amanda Gonzalez, a spokeswoman for Gowdy and the Oversight Committee, said the committee will wait until the end of its investigation to release its findings.

“To date, the Committee has conducted several transcribed interviews and obtained 2,350 pages of documents as part of our investigation into mismanagement and spending at the EPA. This month, the Committee will interview additional witnesses and receive additional document productions,” she said. “Selectively releasing portions of witness interview transcripts damages the credibility of our investigation and discourages future witnesses from coming forward.”

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders was asked Monday about Pruitt’s use of an aide to inquire about a mattress from the Trump International Hotel, located just across the street from the EPA headquarters. The administration is “certainly looking into the matter,” she said, adding, “I couldn’t comment on the specifics of the furniture used in his apartment.”

While hotel staffers help guests buy Trump-branded furnishings, used mattresses do not appear to be available. A receptionist last week referred a Washington Post reporter to the corporate offices of Tempur Sealy International, where a brand, Stearns & Foster, sells via mail order the same mattress found in rooms at the Trump hotel. A standard queen mattress, without a box spring or any other accompanying items, costs $1,399 before tax and shipping. A standard king mattress costs $1,750.

Trump-branded mattresses used to be available more widely when they were manufactured by Serta and sold in department stores such as Macy’s. But Serta, along with other companies that had paid to license Donald Trump’s name, halted that merchandising business once his political rhetoric during the 2016 presidential campaign sparked controversy. Serta terminated its partnership in July 2015.

Three years earlier, Trump himself had touted the bedding line, tweeting on Oct. 18, 2012: “My Trump Home Mattress Collection by Serta is setting records — they are really phenomenal. You can order them at http://www.serta.com.”

Hupp initially phoned the hotel managing director on Sept. 14 about getting a used mattress, rather than explain her objective in writing, according to emails released under a Freedom of Information Act request by the Sierra Club. In an email that day, Hupp identified herself as one of Pruitt’s employees and said she was “hopeful you could give me a quick call when you have a couple minutes.”

The hotel’s managing director, Mickael Damelincourt, then connected Hupp with his executive assistant, Mary Hapner, to follow up on the matter.

Among the other personal tasks Hupp told congressional investigators she performed for Pruitt, she said she “assisted him in booking travel to the Rose Bowl” over his winter vacation with his family.

She also provided the committee with new details on how she conducted a housing search for him “over the course of a couple of months,” which ultimately entailed moves that his wife and he made to two separate apartments in Washington. While the administrator testified before a House panel that Hupp performed the apartment hunt “on personal time,” Hupp said she did some of it during work hours and used her official agency email at times.

“He asked my help in seeking housing, yes,” she said, adding that she was not compensated for this service.

Pruitt described Hupp in his congressional testimony as “a longtime friend,” and she told congressional investigators that “I would consider him a friend of mine, yes.”

However, federal rules still prohibit a federal employee from making “a donation or a gift to an official superior” and bar a federal official from accepting “a gift from an employee receiving less pay than himself.”

Asked whether she took leave from work when she occasionally looked during office hours at properties for the Pruitts, Hupp told committee staffers, “I did not.”

Juliet EilperinJuliet Eilperin is The Washington Post's senior national affairs correspondent, covering how the new administration is transforming a range of U.S. policies and the federal government itself. She is the author of two books — one on sharks and another on Congress, not to be confused with each other — and has worked for The Post since 1998. Follow

Josh DawseyJosh Dawsey is a White House reporter for The Washington Post. He joined the paper in 2017. He previously covered the White House for Politico, and New York City Hall and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie for the Wall Street Journal. Follow

Brady DennisBrady Dennis is a national reporter for The Washington Post, focusing on the environment and public health issues. He previously spent years covering the nation’s economy. Dennis was a finalist for the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for a series of explanatory stories about the global financial crisis. Follow

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